The Game Show Forum
The Game Show Forum => The Big Board => Topic started by: parliboy on March 31, 2011, 12:17:46 PM
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Linky (http://"http://blog.koldcast.tv/2011/koldcast-news/top-12-game-shows-of-all-time/").
Numbers three and eleven will probably annoy quite a few. Otherwise the list is diverse and reasonable, though the nod goes more toward longevity than quality.
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Though, can you really have longevity without quality?
I can see the reasoning behind number 11. Don't necessarily think it would merit a spot, but it's not my list.
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I can see the reasoning behind number 11. Don't necessarily think it would merit a spot, but it's not my list.
I'm just the opposite. I can see the reasoning behind #3 (not everybody's a purist) but #11 is absurd.
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Though, can you really have longevity without quality?
How long did "According to Jim" run?
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I can see the reasoning behind number 11. Don't necessarily think it would merit a spot, but it's not my list.
I'm just the opposite. I can see the reasoning behind #3 (not everybody's a purist) but #11 is absurd.
Well, I dig #3. I'm as uninterested in the semantics as you are, but I think #11 made the list on premise alone. Of course, I can literally go two feet to my right and find a show with premise and execution, but that's beside the point.
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I was more offended by his lack of writing ability and fact checking than by the inclusion of some shows or exclusion of others. "Bankrupts hidden on the wheel." Really.
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Since the article serves primarily as an advertisement for their own online game show, I don't think they really care whether their list is reasonable.
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If you take out #3 and #11 and move the games up to fill those slots in order, it's a fine list, especially since they've picked something other than Price is Right first.
/Even though Feud over Wheel is just a bit weird
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but I think #11 made the list on premise alone.
Here's a project: Get yourself a college-ruled index card. Now, one per line, compile a list of games not on that list that would be a better fit than #11. (Hint: Start with Password, and then run down the Barry / Enright oeuvre. For starters. And I'm not talking about the only-we-remember-it geeky shiat like Now You See It. You can stay mainstream.)
Now, once you have filled up the card (and don't skimp by stopping after the first side!), look at that card and tell me again if you think #11 is the least bit reasonable. That said...
Since the article serves primarily as an advertisement for their own online game show, I don't think they really care whether their list is reasonable.
...QFT. Not sure why they even bothered making the list eleven items long when they could have stopped after 5 and gotten a head start on the all-you-can-eat Rocky Mountain Oyster special down at I.P. Freely's.
/as an added bonus, this would give them something in common with their article
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I was more offended by his lack of writing ability and fact checking than by the inclusion of some shows or exclusion of others. "Bankrupts hidden on the wheel." Really.
Mystery round. Bankrupt is hidden on the wheel.
He may have been right by accident, but he was right.
/ Or maybe he meant The Creature that ate all your points.
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I was more offended by his lack of writing ability and fact checking than by the inclusion of some shows or exclusion of others. "Bankrupts hidden on the wheel." Really.
Mystery round. Bankrupt is hidden on the wheel.
He may have been right by accident, but he was right.
Sure, but it isn't like the players aren't made aware of it before the fact. You know one of 'em is a Bankrupt. And if that doesn't fly, I'll fall back on his description of the game play of Fifth Grader. And the fact that Fifth Grader made the list, and Password did not.
And Concentration.
Or any of the panel shows.
I could go on.
I won't.
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Every show on the list was in production during the last decade. This betrays the writer's youth and lack of knowledge of television's 60+ year history.
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I was more offended by his lack of writing ability and fact checking than by the inclusion of some shows or exclusion of others. "Bankrupts hidden on the wheel." Really.
I didn't even read the text, and now I wish I hadn't. Barely literate would be the best way to describe it, plus there's just about one significant error of fact in every listing.
I'm also amused that she's beating the "Based on the game played on Howard Stern’s radio show" drum.
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I didn't even read the text, and now I wish I hadn't.
You incented me to go back and look again.
Damn you to hell, sir. Damn you to HELL.
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Every show on the list was in production during the last decade. This betrays the writer's youth and lack of knowledge of television's 60+ year history.
That's exactly what I thought as well. Soon as I finished the list I asked myself how many are actually on the air right now, and I think it's all but three (technically four with 5th Grader's upcoming cancellation).
But 5th Grader is an incredibly poor choice. The concept of grade-school trivia could work if done correctly...unfortunately they took the lazy money/trivia ladder and helps route that just about every other trivia game has used since Millionaire.
Password's a great option, but if they want to use shows of the last 5 years, then how about Cash Cab?
[quote name='Caryn']
What sets Jeopardy apart from other game shows is the fact that contestants have to be very smart to win very little money.
[/quote]
Perhaps she should define very little...if she means the $1,000/2,000 consolation money, I'd argue that at least J! offers some money. Otherwise, her argument doesn't hold a lot of water. Average champ takes home about what, $15-20K a day or so? Even the $1,000 is a thousand more than I had an hour before.
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[quote name='Caryn']
What sets Jeopardy apart from other game shows is the fact that contestants have to be very smart to win very little money.
Perhaps she should define very little...if she means the $1,000/2,000 consolation money, I'd argue that at least J! offers some money. Otherwise, her argument doesn't hold a lot of water. Average champ takes home about what, $15-20K a day or so? Even the $1,000 is a thousand more than I had an hour before.[/quote]
I think in her simple-minded view, an average Jeopardy payday of $20K or so pales in comparison to the millions bandied about on some of the modern quizzes. That sort of inane analysis permeates every listing as well.
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I think in her simple-minded view, an average Jeopardy payday of $20K or so pales in comparison to the millions bandied about on some of the modern quizzes. That sort of inane analysis permeates every listing as well.
Makes you wonder what she's pulling down for such brilliant insights.
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Makes you wonder what she's pulling down for such brilliant insights.
The same thing I pull on to achieve insights of equal brilliance. I flew through the list the first time I 'read' it; when I took my time I was awestruck.
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Every show on the list was in production during the last decade. This betrays the writer's youth and lack of knowledge of television's 60+ year history.
No it doesn't. She was trying to get her piece done with a minimum of time and effort. That she succeeded admirably in her quest doesn't say anything about her knowledge or age, no matter how badly you want that to be true.
Password's a great option, but if they want to use shows of the last 5 years, then how about Cash Cab?
But the list isn't the Best Game Shows of the Last Five Years, it's Of All Time.
I get why she picked the entries she did. For the audience the site is aiming for, those are twelve titles that Joe Everyman will recognize. He may not watch them, but he recognizes them. Now, if instead the editor had paid her some decent coin and said "I want you to do some research and fact-checking," maybe we get some entries that would rank higher on our own Awesome-O-Meter, but wouldn't be as recognizable to the readers. And if the topic was "The Ten Best Game Shows You've Never Heard Of," then we get to see Three On A Match, Video Village and Split Second.